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CENTRE FOR LIFE HISTORY RESEARCH SEMINARS - Spring Term 2006
All seminars will take place in the University of Sussex Library, Library
meeting room (2nd floor), from 12.30-2.00 pm.
31st January: Toby Butler, geography department, Royal Holloway, University
of London and the Museum of London.
A walk of art: sound walks, oral history and landscape.
In an effort to make oral history recordings more interesting to the
public, I have spent three years developing two 'memoryscapes', outdoor
walks that involve playing memories on a CD walkman or MP3 player at
specific points along the journey. In this talk I will be discussing sound
artwork that uses walking and memory, and report on my efforts to create
and evaluate two sound walks of my own, along the river Thames in London,
using original interviews as well as archive recordings from the Museum in
Docklands collection. The walks can be experienced online at
www.memoryscape.org.uk
7th February: Krista Woodley, freelance oral historian, Southampton Oral
History Unit and the University of Brighton.
Riveting Stories: Southampton Oral History Unit's Vosper Thorneycroft oral
history project
Southampton Oral History Unit's Vosper Thorneycroft oral history project
recorded oral history interviews with over 50 people who worked in a local
Southampton shipyard that recently closed. Krista will talk about the
project, producing an exhibition and a book, and the local community's
response.
28th February: Mark Bhatti & Jayne Raisborough, School of Applied Social
Science, University of Brighton.
The Hoover in the Garden? Empowerment and Resistance in Women's Leisure
We explore empowerment and resistance in the leisure site of the domestic
garden. The use and meanings of the domestic garden are continually(re)
negotiated, and can act as a place for empowerment which may (or may not)
flow through to resistance of gender norms. The garden promises some space
for agency for women; it can be a source of freedom, artful creativity,
self-expression, and independence; the extent to which this always results
in resistance is problematised. One woman's gardening story (drawn from the
Mass Observation Archive) tells of the significance of the garden in her
childhood and her family, as well as the re-positioning of herself within
gendered norms.
7th March: Rocío G. Davis, University of Navarra, Spain.
Cultural Histories: Reading the Family Memoirs of the Asian Diaspora
This presentation explores the creation of cultural memory through Asian
North American family memoirs, to understand how they function in the
intersecting projects of reclaiming history and building community. These
purposes lead us to understand the need to continually address the cultural
work enacted by these literary texts, as well as their specific aesthetic
projects as mutually enhancing and intertwined purposes.
For further information about the seminars, email Gerry Holloway or Teresa
Cairns:[log in to unmask]
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[log in to unmask] or postal address to: CLHR, Centre for Continuing
Education, Sussex Institute, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RG
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